DG02816 said:
Eddie Pearson was morning guy on the old WEAN-790. Remember "Bustrum Time"?
Yup..."Uncle Eddy's Open House". "Bustrum" was really Ray Sjoberg who was a sort of sidekick.
DG02816 said:
Mowry Lowe was WLKW-990's first GM. I remember him doing some airtime on WARV-1590 years later.
He started in radio in the late 1920's; I believe at WJAR, as "The Man On The Street". I may be wrong about the station; equally it might have been WPRO or WEAN in the days of department store ownership. To this day I don't know how he came to lose an eye. I worked at WLKW when he was GM. Had many quirky little rules. For example, you couldn't say "It's Ten O'Clock". He hated the term "O'Clock". I'd be surprised if he did airwork at WARV, it being a rather fundamentalist Christian station and Mowry having been Jewish.
DG02816 said:
The Stricker had a long career on WJAR-920 and Ch. 10. He was PD of WICE-1290 when it did talk after 920 went Top 40. WICE was owned at this time by Stricker friend Bob Crohan. He ended his career on WPRO.
I never worked with Sherm but did hang out, in my youth, at the #10 Dorrance Street studio of WICE where the notorious "singing clock" kept engineer Freddy Weiss (later of WJAR-TV) busy. In later years Sherm and I frequented the same restaurant and always found a few minutes to swap war stories.
DG02816 said:
Harry V. Mc Kenna was WEAN's news director .
Harry trained many news people who went on to other stations. Notably Joe Postar, first news director of WLKW, and Joe Connell (writer but never reader) who was Joe's assistant ND. When I was doing mid-days at WLKW Joe and I used to slip out and drink our lunch at the neighborhood bar on the side street by the back door of the Lowe's Theater Building ('LKW was on the 4th floor).
DG02816 said:
Bob Bassett was the "voice" of WTEV, Ch.6. I think he also did some airtime on WLKW as well.
Bob started at WPEP in Taunton and moved to WHIM, at which time he pretty much got me started in radio by arranging an audition which I failed miserably. I worked with him in later years when weekending at WLKW, and I think he was he who moved to WPRI-TV (he was there only briefly) and left the full-time opening that I filled for a year or so. I later worked with him for about 9 years at WTEV; he doing sports and my having shifted to engineering.
DG02816 said:
Mort Blender did news for years on Channel 12. Later he did the news in the morning on WLKW opposite Tony Rizzini.
I don't recall Mort doing news on WLKW but I had been away from there for many years when Mort retired from 12. Tony was best man at my wedding back in 1966. He had done radio for decades but never public speaking and froze for a fair bit when he looked up from the reading he was about to do and saw what looked to him like a sea of faces which, in reality, was only a small group compared with his normal audience. In fact, Tony was PD at WLKW at the time Mel Burns (now THERE was a voice) died and I moved to WXTR and took his place as PD for The Hysko radio empire (1 station).
But more about Mort....he used to do a taped classical program for WPFM (now WBRU). It was Mort's narrative on Verdi's "Requiem" that was running when engineer Chuck B. (name left off intentionally) defeated the interlocks to work on the transmitter "hot" and perished.
I gotta say that I'm impressed! I hadn't really expected any responses.
Also hasten to add that Doug deserves to be on the same "list" as some of these old-time radio greats and I hope his memory will linger as did the names above in your thoughts...and in the thoughts of many others. Doug was a good friend of Jack Kavanagh who worked with him at 10 for several years. IIRC, Doug flew out to Sacramento when Jack married back twenty some years ago. I've lost touch with Jack (started him in radio at 'XTR) and hope someone reading this board may still contact him from time to time and tell him about Doug.